Friday 30 September 2016

Building Relationships With Your Subscribers

Before we get into the intricacies of squeeze pages, there's a concept you need to recognize and put into place while you are building a list with any method.

From the first contact with your subscribers or customers, you should be quietly building a relationship with them that is friendly, helpful, honest and full of readily available information they need.

When you think about it, everything we do is based on relationships that we've created , usually without thinking too much about it...just letting it happen naturally.

With an mailing list though you need to manufacture this relationship.

How do you build a personal relationship with so many people? In this high-tech, "moving at the speed of light" Internet marketing scene, you might be surprised that it all depends on ancient principles you were taught by your grandparents or parents:

  • Good manner.
  • Taking an interest in the needs of other people
  • Providing help when it is needed
  • Being  honest in all your dealings with anybody

It's just good old fashioned customer service! 

To start with, after you get a sale or subscription to your blog or newsletter, your autoresponder should send them an email you created with a "Thank You message". That email should also explain that they have to confirm their subscription in order to get their download link or whatever was promised when they signed up. Directions on how to confirm their subscription should be explicitly stated.


From this point on, your relationship building with that subscriber will be through email marketing. Don't get nervous about a new concept when you are just learning about squeeze pages. Email marketing, from your standpoint, is what you are doing when you send an email to any customer or subscriber.

Take a look at what you are already doing:

When you send a personal email trying to get a date with someone or pleading with your brother to help you fix your car, you are already email marketing. All of us market constantly. We just do it with a different focus, depending on who the target is and what we want from them. And we never think of it as email marketing. You already have a set of skills you can adjust slightly and use in your business.

One of the best tips I was ever given and still use today is when you're writing an email to send to your list, write it to just one person – this helps you to find that 'personal tone' that is the secret to success.

Remember marketing is just promotion, selling or advertising.

Consider this. You've felt the need to build relationships since your birth, starting with your parents and siblings and moving on, as you grew older. In one way or another, you've been marketing yourself as your desires and needs expanded.

Remember thinking up ways to get the keys to your dad's car when you wanted to impress someone on Saturday night? What do you think you were doing when you solicited the neighbors for lawn mowing jobs or babysitting? Take those skills you've used all your life and use them to talk to your customers with emails.

When you first start to create a personal business relationship with your customer you have to consider two things: what your motive is and what your customers want. The secret to selling is providing what the buyers need and making it available.

Here's what you need to decide before you create any web pages or marketing messages:

  • What do you want your customer to do? Subscribe? Buy? Refer?

  • What response are you trying to get? Questions? Answers? Sales? Affiliations? Joint Ventures?

When you can answer those two questions, you will have narrowed and sharpened your focus. Take that focus and use it when you are building relationships or web pages, particularly squeeze pages.

Here's several ways to start building relationships:

One way to do this is to stay in touch with different types of emails. Do not send an email to your customers every day. Initially, they will get sent two emails from your autoresponder. One will thank them and ask them to confirm their email address. The next will send the report they wanted or links to their download and the bonuses you promised.

After that, give them a break and follow up several days later with a simple inquiry about their satisfaction with your product or service. Give them a contact method, email address, help desk or phone number, in case they are having difficulty with your products. That's it! No selling, no marketing, no links to sales pages. This will start building their trust in you.

In a week or so, send an email with some related content or specific information your customer might need. This can be about new trends in your niche or helpful information. A gentle marketing approach would be to suggest that they can receive more information on the topic by following the included link to that information.

When they follow the link, your web page would have graphics and data about your products that may or may not be of interest to them. You are marketing without being gratingly obvious. Just make sure that, when they follow the link, they land on the information they wanted in the first place. Do not make them crawl through several pages before finding what they want. It irritates your customer and ruins your credibility.

One simple rule of thumb that might be helpful to you is to remember how you feel when you are constantly bombarded with email sales pitches every day or several times every day. Responsible marketing with emails to your customers is the only way they have to determine who you are and whether or not to trust you.

Too many marketers treat their subscribers like fools. But what would you do if you got nothing but sales emails every day? What would be in it for YOU?

Nothing – of course, which is why people unsubscribe from lists that hammer them with sales emails.

Some say that, for every sales email, you should send two just  informational emails, occasionally including one with a surprise free gift for download on your website. Others ignore that advice and go their own way. It is, of course a personal choice based on your own marketing campaign, but you might want to check out what successful marketers do and remember to "Copy Success."

Once you decide on your specific 
marketing approach, it is important that you maintain a steady email plan that keeps contact with your customers without irritating them. Do nothing that will make you lose existing customers, who are almost 10 times more valuable and not as fickle as new customers.

One of your major goals will be to draw customers into your business, making them virtual friends that feel like they have a stake in your success or are a valuable part of it. The emotional trigger you are accessing here is the need for a sense of belonging to something like a community.

One way to do this is to offer all your subscribers and customers free membership in a forum dedicated to niche topics of interest to them. They can ask questions, meet new friends, give advice, offer help when they have the solution to a problem and share experiences. That keeps them involved with you and open to buying your products.

What you've built with a forum for
 your customers is trust, a source of information 24/7 and a sense of community. Those are very critical emotional triggers that will build loyalty and credibility. If you chose this avenue, it is important for you to be an active member of your own forum. Your personality and personal contact with your members is what will keep your members involved with you.

If you are looking for topics to suggest or products to develop that your customers or forum members want, just ask them. An email from you asking what information, instructions or software they need will probably give you enough topics to keep you busy for months. It also improves your standing in their eyes.

Another way to draw your subscribers into a relationship with you is to run an occasional contest with a prize that has some value to the niche members on your list. If your niche is golf, for example, run a contest asking for the best way to improve a golf problem, like "How To Easily Get Out Of A Sand Trap" or "How to Putt Like A Pro."

Your prize, might be an eBook compilation of the solutions you got from your subscribers (identifying each contributor and expanding on their suggestion), or one you wrote yourself about some aspect of golfing that is not a rehash of old data. A golf shop might be willing to donate a box of golf balls in exchange for a plug.


Keep what you've learned in your mind and let's get down to some specific aspects to creating and using squeeze pages to increase your conversion rate. 

How To Get  The Most Out Of The Squeeze Page System

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